The evidence of the Chinese traveller, Hiuen-thsang, to the existence of sun-worship at Multán in 640 A.D., is very decisive. He found there a “temple of the sun, and an idol erected to represent that grand luminary,” with dwellings for the priests, and reservoirs for ablution;* yet he says the city was inhabited chiefly by men of the Bráhmanical religion. A few centuries before, if Philostratus is to be believed, Apollonius, after crossing the Indus, visited the temple of the sun at Taxila, and Phraotes, the chief of the country, describes the Indians as in a moment of joy “snatching torches from the altar of the sun,” and mentions that he himself never drank wine except “when sacrificing to the sun.” After crossing the Hyphasis, Apollonius goes to a place, which would seem to represent Jwála Mukhí, where they “worship fire” and “sing hymns in honour of the sun.”* When the Arabs arrived in the valley of the Indus, they found the same temple, the same idol, the same dwellings, the same reservoirs, as had struck the Chinese, but their description of the idol would lead us to suppose that it was a representation of Budh. Bírúní, however, whose testimony is more valuable than that of all other Muhammadans, as he was fully acquainted with the religious system of the Hindús, plainly tells us* that the idol of Multán was called Aditya,* because it was consecrated to the sun, and that Muhammad bin Kásim, the first invader, suspended a piece of cow's flesh from its neck, in order to show his contempt of the superstition of the Indians, and to disgust them with this double insult to the dearest objects of their veneration.*
Shortly before Bírúní wrote, we have another instance of this
tendency to combine the two worships. In the message which
Jaipál sent to Násiru-d dín, in order to dissuade him from driving
the Indians to desperation, he is represented to say, according to the
Táríkh-i Alfí: “The Indians are accustomed to pile their property,
wealth, and precious jewels in one heap, and to kindle it with the
fire, which they worship. Then they kill their women and children,
and with nothing left in the world they rush to their last onslaught,
and die in the field of battle, so that for their victorious enemies the
only spoil is dust and ashes.” The declaration is a curious one in
the mouth of a Hindú, but may perhaps be considered to indicate
the existence of a modified form of pyrolatry in the beginning of
the eleventh century. The practice alluded to is nothing more than
the Jauhar, which is so frequently practised by Hindús in despair,
and was not unknown to the nations of antiquity. Sardana-